Word: racistly
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...failed to show Negro women too, thus reflecting "one of the mean slanders" against the Negro race. As for the short story, the author (Lillian Long) had failed to answer "slanders" uttered by one of her characters. Concluded the Worker's abject editors: In . . . uncompromising opposition to ... racist ideas, we publicly criticize their appearance. At the same time, we recognize our responsibility and our grievous fault...
...Leopold. During the war he acted as if there were no war, contributed stories to collaborationist papers. When others, writing in French magazines, denounce his wartime course, he shrugs them off as "professionals of the Liberation." His friends have tried to excuse him by saying that he wrote anti-racist stories which the Nazi censor rejected, but he himself offers no defense for what he did or did not do. As a practicing pessimist, he prefers to meet such, questions, as he does most others, merely with a silent stare...
When the law of the state collides with the law of God, there is bound to be trouble for both state and church. Presumably, the racist Malan government of South Africa, when it banned marriages between people of white and Negro ancestry last year, hoped to avoid such complications, but it was clear that they were not to be avoided. South Africa's churchmen declared war on the "mixed marriages...
Among topics that Hall will discuss are the techniques of the American agitator, the strength and make-up of racist organizations, and how these groups employ propaganda weapons. He will augment his talk with wire-recordings made at various demonstrations and will exhibit samples of anti-democratic literature...
With South Africa's rabid racist Prime Minister Daniel Malan ready to seize on any excuse to step into Bechuanaland, which borders his country on the north, Britain's ministers seemed far more willing to heed his wishes than those of the Bamangwato. This week in Serowe, 35 Bamangwato elders refused to go to a special Kgotla meeting called by Britain's High Commissioner Sir Evelyn Baring to inform the Bamangwato of the government's decision. "We cannot," they said, "attend any tribal meeting in the absence of our true chief Seretse...